•  31
    Against Modal Accounts of Algorithmic Robustness
    Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy (Philippine e-journal) 27 (2). 2026.
    Machine learning (ML) models are increasingly used to make decisions in medicine, economics, and other high-stakes environments that demand epistemic trust. The role they play is epistemic because they produce outputs that inform us, and such outputs can either lead to true or false beliefs. Even if most algorithms tend to generate true outputs during their training phase, they are nonetheless untrustworthy because they occasionally produce false outputs when deployed in real-world environments.…Read more
  •  20
    Deathbots and the Moral Knowledge of Grief
    Philosophy and Technology 39 (2): 87. 2026.
    Deathbots are artificial intelligence tools that enable the possibility of encountering deceased loved ones. The advancement of Large Language Models in deathbots makes the imitation of the deceased possible by inputting personal data, messages, photos, and videos. Such AI systems can process new information and provide appropriate responses while mimicking the dead, offering the bereaved a way to sustain connections with them. However, we claim that deathbots put at risk a special kind of knowl…Read more
  •  50
    Medical Populism and Epistemic Rights
    Asia-Pacific Social Science Review 25 (2): 122-134. 2025.
    Medical populism, a performance-based political style that orchestrates antagonistic relations between the people and medical establishments, has served as a concept for analyzing the politicization of healthcare. With its four fundamental features, that is, invoking knowledge claims contrary to medical experts’ advice, simplifying discourse, dramatizing responses to public health crises, and forging divisions, medical populism compromises our access to accurate medical or public health informat…Read more
  •  60
    Are Pain-Beliefs Gettier Proof?
    Logos and Episteme 16 (2): 223-235. 2025.
    In ‘The Case of Patient Smith: Pain-Belief, Epistemic Luck, and Acquaintance,’ Elliott Crozat challenged the infallibility of the belief that “I feel pain” by providing a Gettier-type example that shows that such a pain-belief can be fallibly justified and luckily true. We claim that this move is problematic given that the case is not the Gettier sort. To demonstrate this, we first question the causal relation or lack thereof between the subject’s pain-belief and the pain he felt. We argue that …Read more